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Hot in
recession:
Chocolate,
Running
Shoes,
Home
Gardens
and
Cheap
Wine
By DEB
RIECHMANN
Associated
Press
Writer
It's not
all doom
and
gloom in
the U.S.
economy.
Some
products
are
bucking
the
recession
and
flying
off
store
shelves.
Sales of
chocolate
and
running
shoes
are up.
Wine
drinkers
haven't
stopped
sipping;
they
just
seem to
be
choosing
cheaper
vintages.
Gold
coins
are
selling
like hot
cakes.
So are
gardening
seeds.
Tanning
products
are
piling
up in
shopping
carts;
maybe
more
people
are
finding
color in
a bottle
than
from
sun-worshipping
on a
faraway
beach.
Strong
sales of
Spam,
Dinty
Moore
stew and
chili
helped
Hormel
Foods
Corp.
post a 6
percent
increase
in first
quarter
sales in
its
grocery
products
unit.
Consumers
have
trimmed
household
budgets
and
postponed
buying
cars,
major
appliances
and
other
big-ticket
items.
Yet they
still
are
willing
to shell
out for
small
indulgences
and
goods
that
make
life
more
comfortable
at home,
where
they are
spending
more
time.
Recession
shoppers
also are
drawn to
items
that
make
them
feel
safe,
both
personally
and
financially.
"The
focus on
the
family
hearth
is
something
that has
happened
in
nearly
every
recession.
It's,
`How can
I have
more fun
at
home?'"
said
Paco
Underhill,
whose
company,
Envirosell,
monitors
the
behavior
of
shoppers
and
sellers
across
the U.S.
and in
other
countries.
"People
are much
more
focused
on their
homes
and
their
immediate
happiness
and
they're
buying
things
that
they can
use
themselves
— seeds,
fishing
equipment.
Lipstick
and
chocolate
are
small
rewards
that
make you
feel
better."
Profits
in the
first
three
months
of 2009
at
Hershey
Co., the
nation's
second-largest
candy
maker,
surged
20
percent
and beat
Wall
Street's
expectations.
Kraft
Foods
Inc.
reported
double-digit
growth
in
macaroni
and
cheese
dinners
— the
consummate
comfort
food.
Recessions,
it
seems,
are good
for
love,
too.
Over the
final
three
months
of 2008,
condom
sales
rose 5
percent
and
Match.com
reported
its
strongest
performance
in seven
years.
But
economic
woes are
as rough
on the
tummy as
they are
on the
wallet.
Chicago-based
market
researcher
Information
Resources
Inc.
reports
that
sales of
laxative
liquids
and
powders
rose
11.5
percent
for the
52 weeks
ending
April
19.
Sales of
stomach
remedy
tablets,
including
Pepto-Bismol
and
Phillips
brands,
climbed
8
percent.
As
expected
during
any
economic
slump,
recession
shoppers
looking
for
deals
have
boosted
sales at
discount
chains
such as
Wal-Mart
Stores
Inc.
Dollar
Tree
Inc.
sneaked
into
this
year's
Fortune
500 for
the
first
time, at
No. 499.
There's
a
general
tendency
to trade
down,
according
to Leo
J.
Shapiro
&
Associates,
a
consulting
firm in
Chicago.
That
means
eating
dinner
at the
kitchen
table
instead
of
restaurants,
buying
used
cars and
shopping
at
do-it-yourself
auto
parts
stores.
It means
spending
less on
clothes.
Sales at
luxury
retailer
Saks
Inc.
fell 32
percent
last
month.
Sales at
Goodwill
Industries
International
stores
in the
U.S. and
Canada
jumped
by 7
percent
in
March.
"If
you're
used to
eating
out,
maybe
you're
now
buying a
high-end
steak at
the
supermarket,"
said
Bill
Patterson,
a senior
analyst
in
Chicago
with
Mintel
International,
which
supplies
consumer,
product
and
media
intelligence.
"If you
eat at
home
mostly,
maybe
you are
going
down
from the
branded
product
to a
private
label."
People
are not
drinking
as much
beer or
wine at
bars and
restaurants,
but they
haven't
stopped
drinking.
The Wine
Institute
says
that
despite
the
recession,
U.S.
sales of
California
wines
totaled
about
467
million
gallons
last
year — 2
percent
more
than the
year
before.
But
people
are
looking
more
closely
at
cheaper
selections:
The
overall
retail
value of
California
wine
sales
fell
slightly
from
2007,
the
institute
said.
Those on
the go
are not
shying
away
from
footing
the bill
for
sturdy
running
shoes.
Sales
increased
2
percent
in 2008,
said Tom
Doyle at
the
National
Sporting
Goods
Association
in Mount
Prospect,
Ill.
"Runners
aren't
going to
hurt
themselves
to save
a few
bucks,"
he said.
Likewise,
sales of
bicycle
helmets
are up
as
parents
continue
to spend
money to
protect
youngsters,
he said.
The
financial
meltdown
produced
more
interest
in home
safes.
Coin
dealers
are
awash in
customers
as
investors
big and
small
see the
safety
of gold.
Sunshine
Minting
Inc. in
Coeur
d'Alene,
Idaho,
which
supplies
gold
blanks
to the
U.S.
Mint,
doubled
its work
force in
2008.
"It just
came on
like
gangbusters,"
said
president
Tom
Power,
who
struggled
to hire,
train
and get
new
equipment
to
handle
demand
that
doubled,
then
tripled.
"You
can't
just
flip a
switch
and jump
up
production
overnight."
Guns are
selling
well,
too.
Total
firearms
sales
rose
27.5
percent
at Smith
& Wesson
for the
three
months
ending
Jan. 31.
It's not
a sudden
interest
in
hunting
behind
the
increase;
hunting
firearm
sales at
the
company
declined
during
the
quarter
by 46
percent.
Gun
sales
are
being
driven
by
concern
that the
Obama
administration
will
tighten
gun
laws.
But
people
also are
feeling
a level
of fear
and
heightened
interest
in
self-reliance
as they
weather
the
recession.
"They
are
looking
down the
road
going
`What
could
happen
here?'"
Underhill
said. "I
think a
lot of
Americans
are
truly
scared.
One of
the
things
that
tickles
is our
pioneer
ethos,
which
is, `I
feel
better
with a
year's
supply
of
toilet
paper'
and
`Maybe I
should
start
canning
and
pickling.'"
Many
people
already
are.
The
number
of home
vegetable
gardens
is
predicted
to jump
more
than 40
percent
this
year,
compared
with two
years
ago,
according
to the
National
Gardening
Association.
Sales of
vegetable
seeds
such as
green
beans,
tomatoes,
cucumbers,
squash
and
lettuce
climbed
30
percent
as of
March at
W. Atlee
Burpee,
a large
seed
company
in
Warminster,
Pa. It
organized
a basic
training
course
called
"root
camp"
for
hundreds
of
would-be
gardeners
this
month
outside
Philadelphia.
Still,
when the
economy
grinds
to a
halt,
people
clench
their
teeth.
That
could
mean
spending
money at
the
dentist.
There's
no
statistical
evidence,
but
dentists
such as
Dr.
Matthew
Messina
in
Cleveland,
Ohio.,
are
seeing
more
people
with
tooth-grinding
injuries.
"The
body
responds
the same
way to a
real
threat,
`There's
a
burglar
in the
house,'
as it
does to
a
perceived
stress
like
`I'm
worried
I'm
going to
lose the
house,'"
Messina
said.
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